Framingham State University (Framingham State or FSU) is a public university in Framingham, Massachusetts. The university, previously known as the Normal School in Lexington was founded in 1839 as the first state-supported normal school in the United States before becoming a full-fledged university. It offers undergraduate programs as well as graduate programs, including MBA, MEd, and MS.

History

thumb|left|[[Cyrus Peirce, first president]]

As the first secretary of the newly created Board of Education in Massachusetts, Horace Mann instituted school reforms that included the creation of an experimental normal school, the first one in the United States, in Lexington, in July 1839. The initial name of the school was the "Normal School in Lexington". Cyrus Peirce was its first principal or president.

thumb|left|May Hall, 19th-century architectural rendering

A second normal school was opened in September 1839 in Barre (the school later moved to Westfield) followed by Bridgewater State College the next year. Growth forced the first normal school's relocation to West Newton in 1843, where it was first named the "Normal School in West Newton" before changing again to the "State Normal School in West Newton" two years later in 1845. The measure was signed into law by Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick on July 28, 2010.

Campus

The campus is located in Framingham, Massachusetts. Seven residence halls house over 1,500 students. The Henry Whittemore Library has over 200,000 volumes, Wi-Fi, access to over 70,000 electronic journals, and includes Archives and Special Collections. Framingham State University is located on the high Bare Hill (also known as Normal Hill) and provides views of Boston, Massachusetts away.

Sustainability

In 2007, the school signed the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment. That year, Massachusetts issued Executive Order No. 484, which mandated reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and energy consumption for all state agencies and institutions. Greenhouse gases must be reduced 80% by 2050. In 2010, the school adopted a plan to convert its heating plant to natural gas and to

convert its central chilled water plant to electric chillers.

Framingham State University was named a "Green College" by the Princeton Review in 2010 and 2011. It was one of 22 schools in Massachusetts to receive the distinction, and one of 311 nationwide. It was named to the list again in 2013.

Organization

thumb|The old logo for Framingham State University used until May 2023

Framingham State University is led by an eleven-member Board of Trustees. The governor appoints nine trustees to five-year terms, renewable once. The Framingham State University Alumni Association elects one trustee for a single five-year term. Finally, the student body elects one student trustee for a one-year term. In addition to five full board meetings each year, which are open to the public, the board also meets in standing committees.

The university's annual budget is $105 million, and the school has 775 full and part-time employees. Framingham State University is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education.

Student life

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| Two or more races

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! colspan="4" data-sort-type=number |Economic diversity

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Framingham State University has an Office of Student Involvement and Leadership Development and a Center for Inclusive Excellence. It has a relatively small campus which sits on roughly . Framingham State University also owns and operates a radio station WDJM-FM on 91.3 FM.

Enrollment

Total enrollment (Fall 2021): 4,495 total (3,213 undergraduate and 1,282 graduate students)

  • Men: 44% (1,398 students)
  • Women: 56% (1,815 students)
  • Commuters (degree seeking full-time undergraduates only): 53% (1,445 students)
  • Residents (degree seeking full-time undergraduates only): 47% (1,279 students)

Athletics

Framingham State University fields 14 varsity athletic teams (6 men's and 8 women's) competing at the NCAA Division III level and 4 club athletic teams (1 men's, 2 women's, 1 co-ed) that compete in various leagues. The athletic teams are known as the Framingham State Rams.

Notable alumni

  • Anna Brackett, nineteenth century philosopher, educator
  • Sarah B. Capron, evangelical missionary
  • Olivia A. Davidson, co-founder of Tuskegee Institute and wife of Booker T. Washington
  • Lucie Caroline Hager, (1853–1903), author
  • Jennie Howard, member of a pioneering group of educators who founded normal schools in Argentina
  • Mary Swift Lamson and Sarah Wight, teachers of Laura Bridgman at the Perkins Institute for the Blind
  • Paul J. LeBlanc, President of Southern New Hampshire University; former President of Marlboro College
  • Christa McAuliffe (Class of 1970), astronaut, participant in Teacher in Space Project, died in Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. Center and memorial on campus in McAuliffe's honor.
  • Brian J. Moran, Chair of the Democratic Party of Virginia
  • Joshua Onujiogu, NFL linebacker
  • Rebecca Pennell, first woman college professor in the United States, and niece of Horace Mann
  • Charlotte Champe Stearns, mother of T. S. Eliot.
  • Richard Thompson, Member of the Maine House of Representatives
  • Adam Scanlon, American politician serving as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives.
  • Ruth Graves Wakefield, inventor of the chocolate chip cookie
  • Electa Nobles Lincoln Walton (1824–1908), educator, lecturer, writer, and suffragist
  • Jacob Oliveira, American politician serving as a member of the Massachusetts State Senate.

Notes

References

  • Athletics website